Foreign scholars studying village life throughout Asia
learn much of value which is shared, particularly with their peers. Frequently they also
develop enduring personal relations among families with whom they live and learn. These
cultural anthropologists, sociologists, economists and others contribute to the growing
intellectual milieu of one world.
With only rare exceptions, however, the villagers who have hosted research scholars and
offered insights into their cultures receive little or nothing in return. After the
dissection of their life-styles, problems and aspirations, these usually friendly folk may
be left even more discontented by an awakened awareness of unattainable possibilities.
More than 30 years ago JIRO KAWAKITA began studying the disintegrating environmental
equilibrium of Nepal's Sikha Valley, located west of Pokhara below the snow-clad peaks of
the Himalayas. Population pressure upon scarce land was compounded by modernizing demands
of retired veterans of Gurkha regiments and seasonal laborers who worked abroad. Forests
were being destroyed as need for livestock forage and human food compelled enlargement of
ever-higher hillside fields. Focusing upon high-elevation terraced culture of barley,
wheat, maize and African millet, KAWAKITA complemented his ethnogeographic research with
mountain climbing. Crossing over mountain crests and through gorges gave him a vivid
appreciation of villagers' hardships. He also designed an information analysis system
which he used to help villagers identify their most urgent problems. This system he
patented and it is used today by Japanese corporations for business planning.
Impelled by the plight of these some 5,000 Sikha Valley villagers, KAWAKITA in 1963
decided to find technological answers to their two priority needs: transporting fuel and
forage down steep slopes to their homes, and securing drinking water without carrying it
many kilometers across rugged mountain terrain. Extended discussions with Japanese
technicians led to the choice of two simple technologies. The first was a wire ropeway
similar to that used by tangerine growers in Japan to move harvests from hillside
orchards. In Nepal it would need to be much longer, lighter, of greater tensile strength
and highly durable to cross deep chasms and withstand harsh weather. The second was a hard
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipeline to carry water to villages without cutting into the
fragile schist structure of the mountainsides.
Discovering that government funds were not readily available, KAWAKITA and his associates
established the Association for Technical Cooperation to the Himalayan Areas. After
soliciting contributions from individuals and corporationssometimes in kindand
enlisting volunteers, they flew their wire rope, plastic pipe and supplies to Pokhara.
With the help of the villagers who had participated in all the decisions, these eight tons
of materials were carried four walking days over an arduous mountain trail to the Sikha
Valley. The villagers helped install, and quickly learned to operate, the ropeways which
greatly eased transport of fuel and forage from distant slopes. The pipeline has become a
model for programs of the Royal Government of Nepal and UNICEF. A superhydro pump, whereby
a stream fall of four meters lifts water from 120 to a maximum of 200 meters, did not
prove durable in the Sikha Valley. At Nepalese government request this hydraulic ram that
worked well for five years is being further tested in a village near Kathmandu to
determine the required technological improvements and maintenance system.
As vital as easing the daily lot of the five Sikha Valley villages, is the development of
binational relations between Japan and Nepal, and the new awareness of villagers that
beneficial technologies are attainable without endangering their cultural environment.
KAWAKITA has shown that the skills of human perception of ethnogeographers and other
research scholars can be used to bring technology appropriate to their needs to the
villagers they study.
In electing JIRO KAWAKITA to receive the 1984 Ramon Magsaysay Award for International
Understanding, the Board of Trustees recognizes his winning the participation of remote
Nepalese villagers in researching their problems, resulting in practical benefits of
potable water supplies and rapid ropeway transport across mountain gorges.